

Year in Review 2025
EXPANDING ACCESS TO CARE FOR ALL
INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION
EQUIPPING THE HEALTHCARE WORKFORCE




OUR MISSION
We inspire and equip the next generation of healthcare professionals and expand access to care for all.
OUR VISION
To create a healthier community in WNC and beyond.

Photo of MAHEC Biltmore Campus on cover
© Jeyhoun Allebaugh/UNC-Chapel Hill
Dear Friends, Colleagues, and Partners,
As I reflect on 2024–2025 at MAHEC, I’m reminded of the strength, resilience, and shared purpose that define our work. This year brought both challenges and triumphs that reaffirmed our commitment as a nonprofit to improving health through education and expanded access to care, with a vision of a healthier region where everyone can receive care close to home.
During Hurricane Helene, our teams mobilized swiftly to deliver care under extreme conditions—setting up emergency clinics, delivering medications, and supporting vulnerable patients like pregnant women and those with chronic conditions. In other words, we did what MAHEC has always done: We ran toward the fire.
We celebrated significant growth in our academic offerings—including the integration of a four-year PharmD program on our campus through a partnership with UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy—and since 2019, we’ve doubled the number of graduate medical education programs. We also strengthened our Teaching Health Center residencies and expanded interprofessional training opportunities.
And despite challenges to our mission and the communities we serve—threats to Medicaid, the 340B drug program, and federal support for safety-net providers, research, and graduate medical education—we remain confident. Not because the path is easy, but because we know who we are: educators, caregivers, and problem-solvers, deeply rooted in the communities we serve.
None of this would be possible without you—our alumni, donors, faculty, staff, students, funders, elected leaders, and community partners—whose trust, generosity, and shared vision have helped make our mission real for more than five decades.
Together, we’ll continue to meet the needs of this moment, and the next, and the next. Whether it’s a hurricane, a healthcare crisis, or everyday barriers to care, MAHEC will keep showing up.
And we’ll keep running toward the fire.


William R. Hathaway, MD, FACC Chief Executive Officer Mountain Area Health Education Center
Our Regional Impact
254,607 PATIENT VISITS in our family medicine, internal medicine, psychiatry, ob/gyn, and dental clinics
$1.3 MILLION in charity care provided for our community
800 EVENTS FOR 30,214 PARTICIPANTS in continuing professional development
6 RURAL FELLOWS placed in 5 counties across Western North Carolina
13,943 SCHOOL NURSE encounters across 60 schools
900+ GRADUATES from our medical, dental, and pharmacy residency & fellowship programs since 1978
2,261 babies delivered
$4.3 MILLION in prescription medications filled at no cost to eligible MAHEC patients
$16.2 MILLION received from philanthropy & local/state/federal awards
502 PROGRAMS FOR 14,770 PARTICIPANTS in our state-of-the-art simulation center
7 RURAL TEACHING SITES embedded in 7 counties across Western North Carolina
1,553 STUDENTS provided with school-based therapy across 54 schools
$668 MILLION in economic output generated for WNC by our program graduates since 1978
25 RESEARCH PROJECTS
supported by strategic and evaluation services across all clinical departments
1,000+ STUDENTS attended our high school-level health career programs
8,819 library service interactions
143 PRACTICES
benefited from 1,979 encounters by our experienced practice supports coaches
1,100+ EMPLOYEES serving at MAHEC, including full-time & part-time positions
Financial Report
$135,895,667 PAYOR MIX REVENUE
$144,521,025
All impact and financial data sourced July 2024–June 2025
From Residency to Rural Roots: Our Alumni Choose to Stay and Serve
INVESTING IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
Access to healthcare remains a challenge in many communities, where complex conditions often go untreated. But MAHEC continues to excel at retaining healthcare providers who’ve trained in our graduate medical education programs.
In 2025, 48% of graduates from our 16 residency and fellowship programs stayed in Western North Carolina, bringing our three-year rolling average for initial retention in the region to 51%.
Notably, all six 2025 graduates of the MAHEC Hendersonville Rural Family Medicine Residency Program chose to remain in North Carolina, committed to delivering compassionate, highquality care where it’s needed most. Among them is Audrey Faber, MD, now practicing in Polk County.
“Rural areas are incredible places to work,” says Dr. Faber. “Living in these communities, knowing your neighbors, connecting with the land, and meeting a deep need—that’s a meaningful life. I can’t imagine doing anything else.”

Retention rates shine: Dr. Audrey Faber, pictured with MAHEC Hendersonville Rural Family Medicine
Program Director Dr.
chose to stay and serve in rural Western North Carolina following completion of her MAHEC training. A recent study recognized MAHEC as having the most effective graduate medical education program in North Carolina for producing rural physicians.*
*The Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research; June 30, 2025
Residency
Daniel Yoder,
Seven Peaks Family Medicine opened this spring in rural Ashe County, founded by MAHEC Boone Rural Family Medicine Residency graduates Jessica Stevens, MD, Jason Karimy, MD, and Toria Knox, DO.
Dr. Knox is also completing a MAHEC Rural Fellowship, a yearlong opportunity that supports rural providers as they adapt to and serve their communities.
The launch of Seven Peaks is a powerful example of how MAHEC’s training programs not only prepare the next generation of healthcare leaders—encouraging them to continue serving the mountain region— but also inspire innovative solutions that can transform rural health.


Expanding care, growing hope: Launched in 2020 with 12 therapists in 13 schools, MAHEC’s School-Based Behavioral Therapy Program expanded to 48 therapists in 54 schools last year. In the 2025-2026 school year, the program will continue meeting rising mental health needs with 61 therapists in 83 schools.
MAHEC Brings Healing to the Hallways
When children feel sad, anxious, or unwell, learning becomes a struggle—and for families, accessing care can mean missed work or transportation barriers. That’s why MAHEC meets students where they are, offering compassionate behavioral therapy, nursing care, and oral health services right in their schools.
In a year marked by the devastation of Hurricane Helene, MAHEC’s presence was a lifeline. Following the storm, school-based behavioral health teams responded to a 34% surge in referrals—1,280 children seeking help for trauma, anxiety, and depression. For these students, care wasn’t just convenient—it was transformative.
BY THE NUMBERS 2024-2025
24,000 visits by 1,553 students to 48 therapists in 54 schools through the MAHEC School-Based Behavioral Health Program, covering 4 counties
13,943 encounters between 31 school nurses and students in 60 schools through the MAHEC School Health Program; 65 health office visits resulted in calls to 911
554 visits by the MAHEC School Smiles Program in 9 schools to provide dentistry care for young children, 27 of whom had permanent molar decay
Our Community Care Navigators Meet Patients Where They Are
At MAHEC, Community Care Navigators are often met with tears—not just of frustration or anxiety, but of relief and gratitude. These compassionate professionals help patients overcome social barriers that impact their health, from housing and food insecurity to transportation and access to medications.
Launched in February, this initiative reflects MAHEC’s deep commitment to addressing the social determinants of health across Western North Carolina. In just four months, the team completed nearly 1,450 screenings to identify patients in need of essential resources.
Of those whose screenings were positive, 80% requested assistance—and the Care Navigators delivered, arranging transportation for prenatal care, helping with access to affordable medications, connecting families displaced by Hurricane Helene with food and baby supplies, and even providing clothing and toys for the child of a patient in need. Our work is made possible by collaboration with other nonprofits across the region, including ABCCM, Eblen Charities, MANNA FoodBank, and others that share our vision and values.
“We listen, hold space, and help patients feel seen and heard,” says Wakeena Casiano, MBA, EMT-P, Director of Care Navigation. And when the tears come, they’re ready—with tissues and open hearts.
VOTED #1
MAHEC won 1st Place for Primary Care in the 2025 Best of Asheville Awards

Care beyond the clinic: Creative and resourceful, the Community Care Navigation team connects patients—screened for health-related social needs by their MAHEC provider—with support to improve their health and well-being.
MAHEC Powers Through Disaster to Support the Healthcare Workforce
Despite Hurricane Helene’s disruption to power, internet, cell service, and water, MAHEC swiftly adapted—just like during the COVID-19 pandemic— to continue delivering high-quality Continuing Professional Development programs.
Just five weeks after the storm, MAHEC hosted our first in-person event: the 8th Annual Dr. Suzanne Landis Geriatric Summit. More than 75 healthcare and aging services professionals, along with 12 exhibitors, attended—the majority onsite, despite the lack of running water.
“Attendees took it all in stride, bringing their own water, using porta johns—proof of how essential this summit is to their education and licensures,” said MAHEC planner Rosalyn Wasserman, PT, DPT. “Health professionals count on us year after year for this and other CPD offerings. And we delivered.”
In total, MAHEC served 30,214 CPD participants across health and human services, allied health, dentistry, medicine, mental health, and nursing last year—continuing to equip the region’s healthcare workforce, even in the face of a natural disaster.
WE SHOWED UP
In the wake of Hurricane Helene, MAHEC stood strong. Read stats and stories about how we cared for Western North Carolina in the aftermath:

mahec.net/helene-impact-report

No water, no problem: The Geriatric Summit went on as planned just weeks after Hurricane Helene, despite the lack of running water. The 8th annual event named for Dr. Suzanne Landis (second from left) was one of 800 in-person, online, and hybrid Continuing Professional Development events planned, promoted, and hosted by MAHEC last year.
COMMUNITY RECOGNITION
MAHEC was honored with a 2025 Sky High Growth Award presented by the Asheville Area Chamber of Commerce.
This award is given to businesses and organizations that have achieved impressive growth, embraced innovation, supported their employees, and stepped up for the community in both good times and challenging ones.

Healing, Hospitality, Humanity—and Hope
If anyone understands hospitality, it’s Asheville chef Luis Martinez. As a restaurant owner, hospitality to him means being truly seen and cared for—and that’s exactly what he’s found at MAHEC Internal Medicine.
A busy family man, 39-year-old Luis was diagnosed a decade ago with a diabetes-related condition. “My whole body shut down,” he recalls. “I couldn’t walk or talk. I was in pain.” After being hospitalized multiple times, he’s been concerned another stay could be in his future.
But he’s feeling positive about the care he’s received from Internal Medicine Resident Dr. Binil Jacob. “He’s super awesome and I really like him,” Luis says. “I can see that it’s going to be OK.” And the communications and information from MAHEC? “Superb,” he says.
“There’s a lot of humanity here—the way people treat you, as a person. This is hospitality. I’m very hopeful.”
The future is bright: MAHEC Internal Medicine patient Luis Martinez is feeling hopeful about managing his chronic diabetes-related condition, thanks to what he calls the “hospitality” and “humanity” he’s found at MAHEC along with medical expertise. The Asheville resident is celebrated in cities around the U.S. for his talents as a chef.


Providing for the most vulnerable: The MAHEC Community Pharmacy team helps patients who qualify navigate the complexities of medication assistance programs. Members of the public help, too: When you fill your prescriptions at our 340B pharmacies, it puts dollars directly back into the community and allows us to care for more patients.
Dispensing More Than Just Medications
CARING BEYOND THE COUNTER
Picking up a prescription can feel overwhelming—especially when you’re navigating illness, caregiving, or the demands of daily life. Questions and worries often accompany the process: Will this work? What are the side effects? What if I can’t afford it?
At MAHEC’s Community Pharmacies at Biltmore and Enka/Candler, our team offers more than medications— they provide comfort, guidance, and reassurance. When a patient recently arrived anxious and afraid before surgery, a pharmacy team member gently led her to a private space, listened to her fears and concerns, and offered heartfelt support.
“This moment of compassion wasn’t an exception—it’s part of our culture,” said Amy Lenell, PharmD, AAHIVP, CLC, Pharmacy Manager. “We believe healing begins with listening. Our staffing model ensures our team can take time for meaningful connections while maintaining smooth, thoughtful service for all.”
Inspiring—and Being Inspired by— Future Healthcare Leaders in WNC
Physicians, pharmacists, dentists, and nurse practitioners—these are just a few of the career goals shared by students in the MAHEC Health Careers Academy, one of several pathway programs designed to spark interest in healthcare professions across rural Western North Carolina.
Offered at no cost during the spring semester, the Academy provides high school students with immersive learning experiences, culminating in the highly anticipated Health Careers Summer Camp. This four-day, three-night enrichment program includes hands-on activities like wilderness medicine simulations, building first aid and suture kits, and engaging discussions on career pathways and college preparation.
In 2024–2025, more than 1,000 high school students participated in MAHEC’s pathway programs. While our mission is to inspire the next generation of healthcare professionals, we’re continually energized by the curiosity, passion, and purpose these students bring to the future of healthcare in our mountain region.

Inspiration and aspirations: MAHEC pathway programs provide opportunities to explore healthcare careers through hands-on activities like suturing. Emma, from McDowell Early College, aspires to be a pediatric orthopedist or radiologist, while her classmate Amelia is drawn to emergency medicine.
MILESTONE
Our first pathways program for high school students, the MAHEC Medical Mentoring Program, was founded in 2005

Centering Pregnancy: A Journey of Care, Connection, and Confidence
Autumn Hooker and Jonny Kantner had only been married a few months when they learned they were expecting. Encouraged by Autumn’s mom, they chose MAHEC Ob/Gyn Specialists—where she had received care for two of her own births.
The couple joined MAHEC’s Centering Pregnancy program, which combines individual checkups with group sessions that offer prenatal education and support alongside other expectant parents due around the same time.
“We were a bit hesitant at first,” Jonny said, “but it seemed like an appealing idea to be with others going through the same thing.” Autumn added, “You build real connections— not just with the group, but with your care team. I felt safe and supported.”
At one of their final appointments, providers asked how the group felt about giving birth. “We all said it’s because of Centering that we feel confident,” said Autumn. “We’ve learned so much, and our care team makes us feel like we can do this.” When she and Jonny arrived at the hospital, a familiar face from Centering walked in. “Calm washed over me,” Autumn said. “She’d been with me the whole journey—and now she was here at the finish line.”
SUPPORTING FAMILIES
After pausing due to the pandemic, MAHEC resumed Centering Pregnancy group prenatal care sessions in 2023 and has since benefited 213 families across 28 cohorts.

Support before birth and beyond: For Autumn Hooker and Jonny Kantner, the bonds formed during Centering Pregnancy didn’t end with the birth of their son, Jax. The group continues to share photos, milestones, and the ups and downs of parenting. “You feel so happy for everyone you’ve been with over the past nine months and it’s really, really awesome,” Autumn says.
Our Gratitude
The following list of donors generously supported MAHEC’s mission during the 2024-2025 fiscal year. These gifts include contributions made in support of our endowment, MAHEC Annual Fund, Hurricane Helene relief, and initiatives that advance access to care, health professions education, and community health. MAHEC is grateful to all our donors for prioritizing our nonprofit organization as part of their philanthropy.*
1974 SOCIETY
$1 Million and Above
Dogwood Health Trust
William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust
$500,000 - $999,999
Direct Relief
$250,000 - $499,000
The Leon Levine Foundation
$100,000 - $249,000
Deerfield Charitable Foundation
Jeff and Andy Immelt
Rebecca D. and P. Richard Olson, MD
Pisgah Investments Foundation
RYSE Construction
The Community Foundation of Western North CarolinaRamble Charitable Fund
$50,000 - $99,999
Aeroflow Health
First Citizens Bank
The Cannon Foundation
$25,000 - $49,999
Tom and Lisa Apodaca
Blue Cross & Blue Shield of NC Foundation
Tim Bugg, Capstone Health Alliance
Alston Gardner and Barb Lee
Global Relief Brother’s Brother Foundation
Drs. Sharon and William R. Hathaway
Kincheloe Design Group
Lisa LaVallee, MD
Lori and Ron A. Paulus, MD
$10,000 - $24,999
American Endowment Foundation
Americares
Terry Byrne and Jack Symon
First Horizon Foundation
Fred Goldwater
Hugh and Susan Greene
Casey Hite
Mission Health
Brenda G. Nash
PBI, Inc.
Chris and Sarah Renno
Shelly and Nate Spell, MD
TD Bank
Van Winkle Law Firm
Western Carolina University
LEADERS CIRCLE
$5,000 - $9,999
Stephanie Alexander
Sue and John Bamforth, PhD
Kathleen Cooney, MD
John and Lou Anne Crumpler
Kay and Tom Finger
Marie Lynne LaVallee
Theodore J. LaVallee, Jr. and Lyn LaVallee
Theodore J. LaVallee, Sr. and Afton LaVallee
Michael and Doloris McMullen
John and Martha Sensenbrenner
Vizient Foundation
Anonymous (1)
$1,000 - $4,999
Appalachian Mountain Community Health Centers
Diana R. Bilbrey
Annemarie and Bernie Boehnlein
Walter H. and Elizabeth Cantrell
Carol Coulson, MD
Carolyn L. Coward, JD
Nathan C. Daniel, LS3P Associates
Kathy and Bruce Deighton, PhD
Richard and Bridget Eckerd
Shirley and Ernest Ferguson
Lauren P. Flickinger
Gaston and Beth Gage
Tammy Garrity
Lawrence and Jennifer Goldstein
David Groves
Carla and Dallas Henry
Carol Herfort
Susan and Michael
Hershfield, MD
Kelly Kirchheimer
Anne LaVallee
Francis Maness
Clarinda Mann
Anne McClintic
Frank H. Moretz, MD
Hollie Morris
moss+ross
NC AHEC
NC Perinatal Association
Margaret A. Noel, MD
Eleanor and Charles D. Owen III
Ellis and Avril Pinder
Stephanie Rosener, MD
Roberta Roth
Amy Russell, MD
Sheehan and Kulak Giving Fund DAF
Carol Steen
Brenda and Alan Stiles, MD
James J. Teague III, DDSTeague Dentistry
WCU’s College of Health and Human Sciences
John W. White
Heather Wingert
Aimee Zaas, MD
Marirose Ziebarth
FRIENDS
Up to $999
Julia Abraham
Deborah Aiton
Jack J. Allison, Jr.
Andrew Alspaugh
Dan Anderson
Dustin Anderson
Jim Anketell
Armand Antommaria
Melina and Jacob Arrowood
Alice Atwell
Victor Ayeni
Thomas Bacon, DrPH
Ryan Barclay
Joann Barnard
Michael and Gina Barr
Thomas Bashore
Bryan Batch
Gretchen R. Batra
Karen Behling
Rosy Bellamy
W. Louis Bissette, Jr.
Susan P. Blackford, MD
Susan Blackwell-Crawford
Maureen and Robert A. Blouin, PharmD
Joel Boggan
Kelley Boyum
Claudia Bracy
Cassandra Bradby
Mark Brady
Nicholas Brazeau
Ann Brown
Ann D. Brown
Jennifaye Brown, PhD
Sheila Brown
Andrea Bundt
Latoya Burgess
Carol Burton
David S. Caldwell, MD
Debbie Caminiti
Nicolle Carey
Havely Carsky
Dora Carter
Kelly Cash
Matt Cecil
Karen Chachu, MD
Benny Chen
Li Chen
May Cheung
Arielle Cohen
Caroline Collier
Casey Cooper
Jessica Cote
Mary Courtley
Lizzie Cozart
Linda Cragin
Lisa Criscione-Schreiber
Matt Crowley
David D’Alessio
Siobhan DeLoatch
H. Benson Dendy, III
Declan Devens
Bradford C. Dienst
Bob Dieterle
Elizabeth DiMichele
Christopher Dominick
Cynthia Downman
Marisa D’Silva
Marc Olivier Duverseau, MD
Zenobia Edwards
Ben Edwards
Ron Fagan
Colby Feeney
Stacy Feldman
Elizabeth Flemming
Mary Flipse
Patricia Flowers-Coulson
Mary Foster
William Fulkerson
Debby P. Futrell, PharmD
Jane Gagliardi
Nikki Garcia
Elizabeth Gillespie
Eric Gold
Deborah Grammer
Patrick Gray
Katie Gray
Elari Guy
Katie Haas
Annabel Haberkorn
Claire Haddad
Matthew Hanis
Charin Hanlon
Dwain Harris
Amanda Harvey
Melody Hays
Marc Hehn
Patrick Hemming, MD, MPH
Charlotte Heppner
Melissa M. Hicks, MD
Cheri Hoaglin
Bryan Hodge, DO
Thomas Holland
Christopher Holley
Sandra Horstmann
Yuh-Chin Huang
James Ingram
Cindy Ireland
Laura Jacobson
Edward Jauch, MD
Charles and Jean Johnson
Ellen Justice
Imad Kafilmout
Norah Karlovich
Ankit Kayastha
Alex Kaysin, MD
Veronica Kemeny
Lynda M. Kepler
James King
Gretchen Nyce and
LaDene King, MD
Kevin Kinlaw
Tyra and Jay M. Kirby, III
Sarah Klein
Patricia Kohler
Eugenie Komives
Tim Koves
Theresa Krebbs
Hope Krebill
Tina Latham
Marietta Law
Shelia Laws
Heather Lee
Stephanie Levi
Sarah Lewis
Mark Light
Janet Lindsay
Hilary Long
Jenny Lopez Guy
Diane Lowder
Emily Lundell
Colin Macdougall
Donald Maharty
Elizabeth Marois
Andrea Maron
J. Paul Martin, MD
Marianne Martinez
Orrin W. Mason, Jr.
Patrick McCormick
Marion McCrary
LaWanda McCreary
Ying McEwen
Tim McMahon
Laura McNeely
Eugenia McPeek Hinz
Madeleine Mendelow
Cynthia Mense
Nicolle Miller
Ansley Miller, MD
Nia Mitchell
Kailyn Mock
George Morosani
Michelle Morris
Amanda Morrow
Andrew Muir
Beverly Murphy
Clay Musser
Katherine Neal
Laura Neil
John Nicholls, MD
Bj Paik
Kim Palmer
George J. Peery
Paul Perrotta
John E. Perry III, MD
Kathi M. Petersen
Joseph A. Pino, MD
Mindy Pyle
Sudarshan Rajagopal, MD, PhD
Mark Ray
Red Oak Recovery, LLC
Karen E. Reddix
Nick Reynolds
Teresa Rogers
Katherine Roody
Roxanne Rosenberg
Brooke Rosenblum
Suchita Sata
Harriet Schanzer
Karen Schwabenlender
Julia Sensenbrenner
Richard Shannon
Sarah Shapiro
Emily Sherrard
Kathy Simar-Dick
Kristen Smith
Laurie Snyder
Heidi Snyderburn-Campbell
South Piedmont AHEC
Matthew Sparks
Betty Staples
Jeannette F. Stein, MD
Ellen Steinour
Thomas and Helena Stokes
William Stone
Ned Stone
Lindsay Stone
Wink Stone
Bonnie Stone
Melissa Sturm
Ayako Suzuki
Laura Svetkey
Patricia Tellers
Kim Tharin
Ellen Thomas
Robert Tighe
Hugh H. Tilson, Jr., JD, MPH
June Tinsley
Virginia Tomic
David Torres
Jane Trinh
Dottie Unger
Jenny Van Kirk
Paul and Vicki Vest
Anne Wainer
Marilyn Walker
Katherine Walker
Mary Waller
Virginia Warden
Bonnie Warford
Rosalyn Wasserman, DPT
R. Ellen Watford
Chris Weathington
Diane Weaver
Laura Weis
Eleanor Wellford
Chris Weymouth
Patti Wheeler, MD
Susan Whitley
Lillian Woods
Jennifer Woodward, MD
Jennifer Wu, MD
Daniel Yoder, Jr., MD
Dorothy Young
Andrew Zehner
Daniella Zipkin
*For the giving period of 7/1/2024 - 6/30/2025
We strive for accuracy in acknowledging our donors. If you notice any errors or omissions, please contact Development Director Heather Wingert at Heather.Wingert@MAHEC.net or 828-771-3534 so we can correct your record. Thank you for your support!
MAHEC Board of Directors


Casey Cooper, MBA, BSN
Board Chair
CEO, Cherokee Indian Hospital

Stephanie Alexander, MBA CEO and Owner, Alexander Cree Advisors, LLC

Melina Arrowood, MBA, BSN COO, Mission Hospital
W. Louis Bissette Jr, JD, MBA Partner, McGuire Wood & Bissette Law Firm







Robert A. Blouin, PharmD President/CEO, MAI Foundation; Dean, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy (Retired)

Carol Burton, EdD
Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, Western Carolina University

John Crumpler
General Partner and Co-Founder, Hatteras Venture Partners

Hugh Greene, MHA, FACHE
President and CEO, Baptist Health of Northeast Florida (Retired)

Carla Henry
Senior Vice President, Commercial Banker, First Citizens Bank

James M. Kirby II, MBA, MHA President and CEO, UNC Health Pardee

Jenny Lopez, MSW, LCSWA Post Release Services Director, Applied Intellect, LLC; Bilingual Therapist

Francis Maness, FACHE, MBA Division Vice President of GME, HCA Healthcare
Marianne Martinez, MPA CEO, Vecinos, Inc.
Avril Pinder, CPA, MBA County Manager, Buncombe County
Carol Nguyen Steen, MBA, PHR SHRM-CP VP Human Resources, IT, and Security, Biltmore Farms
Alan D. Stiles, MD UNC Health; UNC School of Medicine (Retired)
J. Jackson Teague III, DDS Founder, Teague Dentistry
William R. Hathaway, MD, FACC CEO, MAHEC (Ex-Officio)
MAHEC Enka/Candler
• Community Pharmacy
• Family Health Center
OUR LOCATIONS ACROSS WNC
MAHEC Family Health Center at Newbridge
MAHEC Biltmore Campus
• Community Pharmacy
• Dental Health Center
• Family Health Center
• Internal Medicine
• Ob/Gyn Specialists
• Psychiatry & Mental Wellness
• UNC Health Sciences at MAHEC
MAHEC Boone Rural Family Medicine Residency Program
WATAUGA COUNTY
MAHEC Family Health Center at Deer eld
MAHEC Internal Medicine at Givens
MAHEC Family Health Center at Cane Creek
MAHEC Ob/Gyn Specialists at Franklin MACON COUNTY
MAHEC Health Center at Cullowhee JACKSON COUNTY
MAHEC Women’s Care at Brevard
TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY
BUNCOMBE COUNTY 12 o ces
MAHEC 16-COUNTY SERVICE REGION OUTSIDE MAHEC SERVICE REGION
MAHEC Hendersonville Rural Family Medicine Residency Program HENDERSON COUNTY 2 locations
MAHEC Dental Health Center at Columbus POLK COUNTY